Anonymous
9 years agoGlyp's - Where are they
I am on Eos & have been for hours. I have found 3 Glyp's. Two and the first site and one at the second. I can not find the 4th Glyp and am so frustrated that I am ready to stop playing this game. As ...
@ianandrews292: What exactly are you having problems with? Some things to keep in mind:
(Missing) glyphs are per console/site. That means the site in the north (where you meet a certain P....) has it's own set, the site in the west has it's own set, and the site in the southeast has its own set.
You only need more glyphs if you still have '?' symbols on the decryption console. If you don't, you can try solving the puzzle.
Keep in mind: You need to solve the north site first, the other consoles won't work until you do - you can collect glyphs, but the consoles are inoperable at first.
Typically (at least on the 'starter' puzzles) the following works: Aim the scanner at the console and follow the cables - they each lead to a glyph. Glyphs are typically on top of or behind things. If you can't get there, there are some pillars around you can raise up with a separate console (southeast & west sites have this). Just use the scanner, follow the blue line, use the attached console, then you can jump where you need to go. (Later consoles, especially optional 'bonus' ones might not have cable hints - you will really have to look everwhere)
Get comfortable with the mechanic of using the scanner to see what leads where - you're gonna use this a lot.
On to the puzzles: If there are no '?' symbols, just do what it says - fill in the board so there are no repetitions per row, column or outlined subshape. Just click each 'empty' spot until it has a fitting symbol. If there's a 4 symbol row/column/shape with three symbols filled in, start there. Move on from there....
Later things get kinda trickier, but the 'learning curve' is okay.
@Sludge-Gulper: Try 'easy' and a somewhat more tactical approach maybe? You'll need to learn to deal with those pesky remnants - otherwise you'll have
As far as combat difficulty goes, I was getting my head kicked in by Remnants in some areas. I lowered the difficulty level from normal to casual, and found my comfort level. Combat is still challenging, but I'm not dying all the time. It's a new game and the control scheme on the PC takes some getting used to so that you can handle it automatically without thinking about what key does what. It's a pretty large learning curve, but I don't feel that the PC interface is "clunky" by any means. The more I play, the more fluid it becomes, so that eventually I will be able to notch up my difficulty level. One of the really great things about MEA is the 5 choices of difficulty, making the game accessable by everyone.
I'm really starting to love MEA the more I play it. You're a Pathfinder, an explorer, in a new universe. It's about exploring, discovery, over coming environmental hazards, deciphering old alien tech and creating a home for the people/aliens of the arks. I love the discovery and learning how to do things, rather than just be told.
I agree totally the premise of the game is sound but why give us weapons that do nothing. I selected normal thinking normal. It isn't normal at all its semi-hardcore. It is so frustrating that I can kill the buggers but not with these weapons emptying 3-4 clips to kill one is insane and of course that is your lot ammo spent. Now you do the rain dance of the naked man. And ultimately die.🤔
@Sludge-Gulper What I've realized is that using your powers, biotics, combat, tech, all these are very, very important in combat. You can't kill a remnant with full shields without taking them down, either having a tech master on your squad or being that yourself.
You can upgrade your weapons, through the research console for example. This should give you a bit of a leverage.
Normal has never been normal in the Mass effect games, which I actually do like a lot. I like challenge and a hard learning curve. It just takes time but you'll figure it out. Start off easy, figure out which powers work for you (overload is always a good pick if you're struggling with shields) and maybe staying in cover isn't the way you like combat. I like getting in the middle of it, I combine Biotics and Tech. Overload, charge and energy drain are my favorites. Get's me up close and personal and a shotgun blast to the face. Energy drain to get shields back up if everything doesn't go as planned and dash away if you get surrounded.
I hope this helps you out a little bit at trying a new way looking at combat.